JERUSALEM — Israeli powers were on elevated alarm on Monday along their nation's northern fringe with Syria after the military reported impeding an activist assault with airstrikes.

Insights about the late Sunday episode were not clear, but rather turmoil from Syria's considerate war has incidentally overflowed into the vigorously monitored fringe zone close to the Israeli-held Golan Heights.

Middle Easterner news media have run stories on airstrikes supposedly completed by Israel in the previous couple of days against the Hezbollah local army, an Iran intermediary, and Syrian armed force targets.

An announcement from the Israeli armed force on Sunday said its powers had run over "a gathering of equipped terrorists who had approached the outskirt with a hazardous gadget planned to be exploded against [Israeli] fighters."

Israel said its airplane reacted with strikes, yet it didn't affirm losses or distinguish the gathering that purportedly endeavored the outskirt assault. Israeli media said four men were murdered.

Israeli media reported Monday night that two of the four men were the children of a previous political detainee from the Druze town of Magdal Shams, on Israel's side of the Golan Heights. The family left Israel for Syria in the 1980s. There was no official affirmation of their personalities, then again.

Amos Gilad, chief of the political security staff at the Defense Ministry, told state radio that it was too soon to figure out who was behind Sunday's penetration endeavor however that "Israel's reaction is generally solid and sharp, reinforcing its prevention."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wrote in a Twitter post, "Any endeavor to hurt our troopers or regular folks will be met with a firm reaction, for example, the [military] operation this evening that thwarted an endeavored fear assault."

On Saturday, Arab media reported that Israeli airstrikes hit Hezbollah and Syrian armed force locales north of Damascus, the Syrian capital. Reports said the targets were Syrian armed force divisions thought to be in ownership of vital weapons and long-go rockets. The Israeli military did not react to the cases.

On Monday morning, after the fringe occurrence, Arab media again reported an airstrike in the same territory — close to Syria's Qalamoun mountains — went for Syrian armed force and Hezbollah weapons stocks. Israel denied Monday's reports, ascribing any such assault to the common war in Syria between the administration of President Bashar al-Assad and radical groups.

"There is a question mark over every one of these episodes, at the same time, at first glance, it does appear to take after an example that we have gotten to be utilized to in the course of recent years — with Israel utilizing its air energy to keep the exchange of weapons to Hezbollah," Jonathan Spyer, executive of the Rubin Center, a research organization at Israel's Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, said in a interview.